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  1. #1

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    Consul to break ground again — in Alaska

    Hello, I’m a newbie but fast trying to figure out what is going on here. I’ve listed the article and have some questions below. Thanks in advance.

    http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_page=2 ... d=10225712
    Published Monday | January 7, 2008
    Consul to break ground again — in Alaska
    BY CINDY GONZALEZ
    WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

    When Jose Luis Cuevas arrived in 2000, few Midlanders knew what to expect of an Omaha-based Mexican Consul.

    Mexican Consul Jose Luis Cuevas is taking a post in Anchorage, Alaska. He has worked in Omaha since 2000.
    The scent of roses still clung to the midtown florist shop Cuevas eventually transformed into a diplomatic branch office of the Mexican government.

    The protection of local Mexican nationals still fell largely to native-born civil rights attorneys and community advocates. And paperwork from Mexico usually required travel to cities like Chicago or Denver where Mexican Consulates already were in place.

    But the longest assignment of his 38-year diplomatic career now is coming to a close. Cuevas, 57, is being transferred to Anchorage, Alaska.

    The Mexican government is charging him with establishing its first consulate in that Canadian border state, where industries include canning and fishing. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that 2,000 Mexicans live in Alaska, compared with about 77,000 in the Nebraska-Iowa region.

    Cuevas said the coastal area will call for more tourist-related work.

    Cuevas' counterpart in Eagle Pass, Texas, will replace him in Omaha. Jorge Ernesto Espejel Montes is to arrive in February after an eight-year stint running his current office. The rest of Omaha's 11-person staff is expected to remain intact.

    Cuevas considers his Omaha-based assignment, which at one time also covered North and South Dakota, his most enjoyable.

    "Initially it was a bit of a struggle to let people know who we were and what we were doing," he said, noting that Mexico's was the first foreign consulate in this area. "Now it's a pretty well-oiled machine."

    Sons Carlos and Luis, 16 and 9, spent formative years here. Wife Lourdes Ivonne advanced into a medical interpreter position.

    Cuevas' tenure coincided with unprecedented national outrage over illegal immigration.

    A Nebraska Minuteman chapter and groups with similar agendas formed locally under his watch and staged protests outside the consulate office at 35th and Dodge Streets. Last year, the Minneapolis-based National Socialist Movement made a potentially volatile visit.

    "I didn't expect it to go all the way up to the Nazis," Cuevas said. "That was surprising."

    He handled the visit with the same diplomacy and behind-the-scenes maneuvering he became known for during his seven and a half years here.

    Cuevas contacted key law enforcement authorities. He discouraged counterprotests. The hour-long rally ended peacefully, but not before local law agencies had spent more than $70,000 on security.

    "If they wanted to protest, fine," Cuevas said. "It was within their First Amendment rights — provided they didn't harm any people or damage the building."

    Latino leaders said they will remember Cuevas as professional, pensive, a stickler for protocol. He wasn't necessarily an outspoken advocate for immigrant rights but was well-connected among officials who might be able to influence a case.

    Jose Garcia, a Latino historian and activist, said he had hoped for more outreach from Cuevas to the established Latino community and a consul who was more proactive on immigrant concerns.

    But that likely wasn't the mandate from the Mexican government, Garcia said. He said he respected Cuevas for creating a sound administration that handled integral paperwork and cultural exchanges.

    A primary role of the consulate is to ensure that Mexican nationals are treated fairly under U.S. law. Mayor Mike Fahey said Cuevas also strengthened the local community.

    "He was instrumental in establishing our Mexican sister city and has undoubtedly left a positive impact."

    Cecilia Olivarez Huerta, director of the State Mexican-American Commission, said a consular presence gave the growing immigrant population a comforting place to handle business that previously required travel to Chicago or Denver. A mobile consular unit sometimes came to town, but visits were occasional and the lines were long.

    The Cuevas era in Omaha started with a bang. He ruffled the feathers of some Latino businesspeople when he sent formal letters calling for removal of the Mexican coat of arms from storefront advertisements and stationery. The official seal shouldn't be used on nongovernment business, he told them.

    Not everyone lauded Cuevas' promotion of the consulate-issued identification card, the matricula. Critics called it a quasi-amnesty for illegal immigrants, allowing them access to banks and other services. Supporters thought it enhanced safety by providing a form of identification.

    Cuevas said he was proud of his accomplishments, including his staff's work on identifying illegal immigrants discovered dead in a railroad boxcar in Denison, Iowa, in 2002.

    Cuevas leaves with a hope that Nebraskans and Iowans raise their tolerance of foreigners. "Some aren't very open to outsiders from other countries," he said.

    Overall, he is sad to leave and considers his stay in Omaha positive.

    "I'll always carry Omaha in my heart," he said. "If I had the opportunity, I'd come back and retire."

    QUESTIONS:

    1. [i]“The protection of local Mexican nationals still fell largely to native-born civil rights attorneys and community advocates. And paperwork from Mexico usually required travel to cities like Chicago or Denver where Mexican Consulates already were in place.â€
    If your ILLEGAL...get out of my country...get out of my state...get out of my community...get out of my face!...otherwise, have a nice day!
    http://nebraskaobserver.wordpress.com/

  2. #2
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    Ain't that grand. Not even Alaska can escape the illegal alien Mexican invasion.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
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    47 consulates in the US and they want to open MORE???
    grrr. i think 47 its too many myself

  4. #4
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    Not counting all the mobile consulates

    We are sadly just giving this country away

    There should maybe be 2 mexican counsulates , 1 in washington
    and 1 in LA

    there should be no more

  5. #5
    Senior Member MyAmerica's Avatar
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    Enough is enough! We will soon become a nation of Mexican consulates.

    Mexico presently has 47 consulates plus a number of mobile consulates. Building more is insane! Mexico must be stopped from interferring with our laws and domestic policies now.

    Please write your congressmen and stop construction of this new consulate and recommend that a foreign government be limited to a grand total of six (or some other SINGLE digit number) regional consulate offices in the US and NO mobile consulates.

    Mexico is overstepping its boundaries in the operation of its consulates:

    Quote:
    Activities of a consulate include protecting the interests of their citizens temporarily or permanently resident in the host country, issuing passports; issuing visas to foreigners and public diplomacy. However, the principal role of a consulate lies traditionally in promoting trade - assisting companies to invest and to import and export goods and services both inwardly to their home country and outward to their host country. And although it is never admitted publicly, consulates, like embassies, may also gather intelligence information from the assigned country. This is especially important if the consulate is located in a port city.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consul_(representative)


    Mexican consulates are engaging in political subversion through covert operations against the United States.

    Quote:
    Covert operations are military or political activities that are not only clandestine (undertaken in a manner that disguises the identity of the perpetrators) but also covert, i.e. denied by the governments that undertake them.

    Covert operations differ from espionage by attempting to influence events in another country rather than gathering information about it.

    1-Forms of covert operations

    Covert action takes many different forms reflecting the diverse circumstances in which it is used.

    There are paramilitary operations, in which a state trains, supports, or advises a military force in another country.

    This is political subversion, in which a state supports or advises a political group in another country or directs propaganda at its population.

    http://foros.fox.presidencia.gob.mx/read.php?5,136579


    "The State Department reminds U.S. citizens to avoid participating in demonstrations and other activities that might be deemed political by Mexican authorities. The Mexican Constitution prohibits political activities by foreigners, and such actions may result in detention and/or deportation."
    U.S. State Department
    "Distrust and caution are the parents of security."
    Benjamin Franklin

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  6. #6
    Senior Member tinybobidaho's Avatar
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    RIP TinybobIdaho -- May God smile upon you in his domain forevermore.

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  7. #7
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    Please support ALIPAC's fight to save American Jobs & Lives from illegal immigration by joining our free Activists E-Mail Alerts (CLICK HERE)

  8. #8
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    The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that 2,000 Mexicans live in Alaska, compared with about 77,000 in the Nebraska-Iowa region.
    I wonder if the 77,000 number represents illegals, mexicans who hold green cards and US citizens of mexican descent. Judging by the amount of mexicans I see around here that number is way too low.

  9. #9
    Senior Member Captainron's Avatar
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    Canada has one embassy and eleven consulates.
    "Men of low degree are vanity, Men of high degree are a lie. " David
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  10. #10
    Senior Member MyAmerica's Avatar
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    The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that 2,000 Mexicans live in Alaska, compared with about 77,000 in the Nebraska-Iowa region.
    2000 people don't need a consulate--Prepare to be invaded Alaska.

    The Mexican invasion has been well planned by Mexico and proves they are openly recruiting their citizens even by telling them where to settle.


    "The liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than their democratic state itself. That, in its essence, is fascism - ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or any controlling private power."
    Franklin D. Roosevelt
    "Distrust and caution are the parents of security."
    Benjamin Franklin

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